Giant fossil tortoise and freshwater chelid turtle remains from the middle Miocene, Quebrada Honda, Bolivia: Evidence for lower paleoelevations for the southern Altiplano Academic Article

journal

  • Journal of South American Earth Sciences

abstract

  • We describe the first Miocene turtle remains from Bolivia, which were collected from the late middle Miocene (13.18-13.03 Ma) of Quebrada Honda, southern Bolivia. This material includes a large scapula-acromion and fragmentary shell elements conferred to the genus Chelonoidis (Testudinidae), and a left xiphiplastron from a pleurodire or side-necked turtle, conferred to Acanthochelys (Chelidae). The occurrence of a giant tortoise and a freshwater turtle suggests that the paleoelevation of the region when the fossils were deposited was lower than has been estimated by stable isotope proxies, with a maximum elevation probably less than 1000 m. At a greater elevation, cool temperatures would have been beyond the tolerable physiological limits for these turtles and other giant ectotherm reptiles.

publication date

  • 2015-12-1

edition

  • 64

keywords

  • Miocene
  • fossil
  • material
  • reptile
  • shell
  • stable isotope
  • temperature
  • tortoise
  • turtle

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 0895-9811

number of pages

  • 9

start page

  • 190

end page

  • 198